Positive Pro-Active Advocacy PowerPoint

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Transcript Positive Pro-Active Advocacy PowerPoint

Positive
Proactive Advocacy Ideas
NOW!
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #1
Start a Facebook page for your
organization and have parents and other
supporters log in. Make sure that
interesting things are posted in a timely
manner. Have a parent update it for you.
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #2
Start a web site (Google is free) and
again have a parent update this page
with photos of students (make sure
you have permission) and timely
events along with notices of concerts
or exhibits, etc.
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #3
Talk with your principal and
superintendent and volunteer to
make a short presentation to your
school board on the arts and your
program. Bring in a few students to
make the presentation. Try to do
this early in the fall semester.
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #4
Make a list of talking points (see
below) and find a parent or
supporter (or group) who is a leader
in your community. Give them
these talking points so that they can
refer to them during their
interactions with school board
members and administration.
Talking points
8 full time music staff impact 2,516 students through the
arts for 266 hours each week.
There are 160+ public performances each year for an
estimated impact on more than 130,000 audience members.
Eight staff members have a combined experience of over
100 years.
7 BA's, 1MA, 1National Board Certification.
Mix the talking points up but cover them all. Be succinct
and don’t compare to sports or anything else.
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #5
Two good quotes to use are: “We
aren’t trying to save the arts; we want
to use the arts to save children.”
(Hard to argue with!) And, “We
don’t teach the arts to make them
professionals, or to make them
teachers, we teach them the Arts to
make them Human!”
Talking points
(These are suggested topics but I am sure that you can find
additional ones that are specific to your program and your
community including why people should choose to buy a home
in your district as opposed to the neighboring areas.)
Hello (Board Members Name)
Did you know that:
The GPA of the HS performing ensembles has been 3.623 for
the last three years. The High School GPA is 3.25.
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #6
Put your standards and benchmarks
in your concert programs or post
them at your visual art displays.
Also, list which benchmark or
standard is being covered be each
selection. (This shows that we are
curriculum based.)
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #7
List your administration and school
board members in your concert
programs or post them at your visual art
displays. Recognize them when they are
there. Ask them to read program notes
aloud for you. It is also good to have
students reading the program notes or
describing their visual art projects.
Positive Pro Advocacy Idea #8
Start NOW! Decisions are being
made daily as the economy and the
state budgets change. Be Proactive
and positive. You catch more flies
with honey …
Positive Pro Advocacy Tip #1
All politics are local and your parents are
the best source of help for you. Do not go
it alone. Get the information to them and
let them go to the Board at the official
meetings and also out in the community.
Contact outside help through the
professional organizations of which you
belong: IBA, IAAE, IMEA, ICDA, ISTA,
etc. Make sure that your local Education
Association is aware of the proposed cuts.
Positive Pro Advocacy Tip #2
Use all the information you can find that show the
impact of the arts on students. Get information
from neighboring districts and also from districts
your size but since time is always a factor make the
facts personal by pointing out specific examples that
pertain to your students! Do you have the yearbook
editor/top football player, etc. in a performing arts
group? Did you have a former art student who has
gone on in the visual arts? List who would be hurt
by these cuts and be specific … name names!
Positive Pro Advocacy Tip #3
Remember you were hired to be an advocate for your
teaching assignment and discipline. Let the administration
and the Board know that you are advocating for students in
their district. Otherwise it is easy to get sidetracked into
making it look like you are only interested in preserving
your job. Remember (but don’t say) that this is an
administrative choice to make and you should not get
pressured into making that choice for them. Do not allow
the divide-and-conquer technique to be used to the
detriment of your students. The administrators are paid
(more than you are) to make these difficult decisions and
you should not let them off the hook by taking any
responsibility for making their decisions easier.
Positive Pro Advocacy Tip #4
Offer a recording of your performance group to your
school and various city organizations for their “hold”
music on their phone systems.
Prepare a PowerPoint (or short movie) of your students
art works and offer it to the school and city agencies
for inclusion on their web pages.
Positive Pro Advocacy Tip #6
Campaign, campaign, campaign as
much as possible but always turn it
toward the needs and benefits of the
students in your district.
Positive Pro Advocacy Tip #5
Remain as positive as possible (wear
your game face) as this not only
makes you appear more professional
but also can make your day go a little
smoother in the face of adversity.
Additional Advocacy Points
State Resources:
Iowa Bandmasters Association,
https://www.bandmasters.org/
Iowa Alliance for Arts Education,
http://www.iowaalliance4artsed.org/
Iowa Music Educators Association. http://www.iamea.org/
Iowa Arts Council,
http://www.state.ia.us/government/dca/iac/
Additional Advocacy Points
National Resources:
National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM)
http://www.namm.org/
Music Achievement Council (MAC)
http://www.nammfoundation.org/music-achievement-council
Music Educators National Conference (MENC)
http://www.menc.org/
VH1 Save The Music, http://www.vh1savethemusic.com/
American School Band Directors Association (ASBDA)
http://www.asbda.com/
Additional Advocacy Points
Resources: Sir Ken Robinson – Out of our Minds:
Learning to be Creative, www.sirkenrobinson.com/
Daniel Pink – A Whole New Mind, www.danpink.com
Elliot W. Eisner – The Arts and the Creation of Mind, Arts
Education Partnership, Critical Evidence www.aep-arts.org/
The Center for Arts Education, Staying in School,
www.SupportMusic.com
Iowa Alliance for Arts Education:
www.iowaalliance4artsed.org
Additional Advocacy Points
Iowa Senate Resolution making March 2011 Arts
Education Month (download at Iowa Alliance for Arts
Education http://www.iowaalliance4artsed.org/
Governors Proclamation making March 2011 Arts
Education Month (download at Iowa Alliance for Arts
Education http://www.iowaalliance4artsed.org/
Additional Advocacy Points
Additional Advocacy Points
Use the above to illustrate that the United States leads
the world in Creativity. The Arts provide that vital
link to developing creativity! Notice where KnowledgeRemember is placed.
Additional Advocacy Points
World Class schools will need more arts
education and not less in the coming years.
Jason Glass – Iowa Department of Education
2011 to Iowa Music Educators Board.
U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan sent a
letter to all state governor’s urging them to
avoid making “short-sighted cuts” and
specifically named “eliminating instruction in
the arts” as one of the cuts to avoid.
Final Advocacy Point
MOST IMPORTANTLY, make
sure the students know you care.
Students will not care what you
know until they know that you care.
As a wise student teaching
supervisor once said,
“You’ve got to love the kids.
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